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Osmoregulatory Systems in Fishes

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Title: Osmoregulatory Systems in Fishes


1
Osmoregulatory Systems in Fishes
  • Maintaining homeostasis with respect to solute
    concentrations and water content

2
Homeostasis
  • Chapter 7
  • Zoology 1450

3
Introduction
  • Homeostasis maintaining steady state
    equilibrium in the internal environment of an
    organisms
  • Much is done involuntarily by action of hormones,
    enzymes and osmoregulatory processes. Although
    occasionally fish do just pick up and move if
    environmental conditions are unfavorable.

4
Topics
  • Osmoregulation
  • Endocrine system
  • Thermal regulation

5
Definitions
  • Homeostasis maintaining steady state
    equilibrium in the internal environment of an
    organisms
  • Solute homeostasis maintaining equilibrium with
    respect to solute (ionic and neutral solutes)
    concentrations
  • Water homeostasis maintaining equilibrium with
    respect to the amount of water retained in the
    body fluids and tissues

6
Definitions, continued
  • Osmotic concentration - Total concentration of
    all solutes in an aqueous solution measured in
    units of osmolals 1 mole of solute/liter of
    water or milliosmolals 1/1000th of one osmolal

7
Osmoregulation in different environments
  • Challenge to homeostasis depends on
  • steady state concentration of solutes in the body
    fluids and tissues as well as
  • concentration of solutes in the external
    environment
  • marine systems environment concentration 34 -
    36 parts per thousand salinity 1000 mosm/l
  • freshwater systems environment concentration lt 3
    ppt 1 - 10 mosm/l

8
Osmoregulation in different environments
  • Each species has a range of environmental osmotic
    conditions in which it can function
  • stenohaline - tolerate a narrow range of
    salinities in external environment - either
    marine or freshwater ranges
  • euryhaline - tolerate a wide range of salinities
    in external environment - fresh to saline
  • short term changes estuarine - 10 - 32 ppt,
    intertidal - 25 - 40
  • long term changes diadromous fishes

9
Four osmoregulatory strategies in fishes
  • 1. Isosmotic (nearly isoionic, osmoconformers)
  • 2. Isosmotic with regulation of specific ions
  • 3. Hyperosmotic (fresh H20 fish)
  • 4. Hyposmotic (salt H2O fish)

10
Osmoregulation Strategies
  • Osmoconforming (no strategy) Hagfish internal
    salt concentration seawater. However, since
    they live IN the ocean....no regualtion required!

11
Osmoregulation Strategies
  • Elasmobranchs
  • maintain internal salt concentration 1/3
    seawater, remaining 2/3 is urea and
    trimethylamine oxide (TMAO). So total internal
    osmotic concentration equal to seawater.
  • Gill membrane has low permeability to urea so it
    is retained within the fish. Because internal
    inorganic and organic salt concentrations mimic
    that of their environment, passive water influx
    or efflux is minimized.

12
Osmotic regulation by marine teleosts...
  • ionic conc. approx 1/3 of seawater
  • drink copiously to gain water
  • Chloride cells eliminate Na and Cl-
  • kidneys eliminate Mg and SO4
  • advantages and disadvantages?

13
Saltwater teleosts
kidneys
chloride cells
14
Chloride Cell fig 6.2
sea water

Na
Na
Na K ATPase
K
Cl-
mitochondria
internal
tubular system
15
Osmotic regulation by FW teleosts
  • Ionic conc. Approx 1/3 of seawater
  • Dont drink
  • Chloride cells fewer, work in reverse
  • Kidneys eliminate excess water ion loss
  • Ammonia bicarbonate ion exchange mechanisms
  • advantages and disadvantages?

16
Freshwater teleosts
Ion exchange pumps beta chloride cells
kidneys
17
Ion Exchange Mechanisms
freshwater
interior
active pump
ATP
active pump
ATP
18
Freezing Resistance
  • What fishes might face freezing?
  • hagfishes?
  • isotonic
  • marine elasmobranchs?
  • isotonic
  • freshwater teleosts?
  • hypertonic
  • marine teleosts?
  • hypotonic

19
Solution for Antarctic fish
  • Macromolecular antifreeze compounds
  • peptides (protein)
  • glycopeptides
  • (carbohydrate/protein)
  • molecules adsorb (attach) to ice crystal
  • surface
  • interfere with ice crystal growth
  • (disrupt matrix)
  • Why is this important???
  • ice ruptures cells hinders osmoregulation

20
What about rapid ion flux?
  • Euryhaline
  • Short-term fluctuations in osmotic state of
    environment, e.g. in intertidal zone or in
    estuaries where salinity can range from 10 to 34
    ppt with the daily tidal cycle
  • these fish have both kinds of chloride cells
  • when salinity is low, operate more like FW fishes
  • when salinity is high, operate like marine fishes
  • kidneys function only under low salinity
    conditions

21
Euryhaline
  • Diadromous fishes (spend part of life in salt
    water, part in freshwater catadromous (migrate
    seaward) or anadromous (migrate up river)
  • hormone-mediated changes associated with
    metamorphosis - convert from FW adaptations to SW
    or vice versa, depending on direction of migration

22
What about stress??
  • Stressors (handling, sustained exercise such as
    escape from predator pursuit) cause release of
    adrenaline (epinephrine) - for mediating escape,
    etc.
  • Adrenaline causes diffusivity of gill epithelium
    to increase (become leaky of water ions)
  • This accentuates the normal osmoregulatory
    challenge for FW or marine fishes

23
How to reduce stress in stressed fishes?
  • Minimize the osmotic challenge by placing fish in
    conditions that are isosmotic
  • add salt to freshwater, e.g. in transporting fish
    or when exposing them to some other short-term
    challenge
  • dilute saltwater for same situation with marine
    species

24
Thermoregulation in Fishes
25
Temperature effects on fish
  • Temperature exhibits the greatest influence on
    fishs lives!
  • Affects metabolism
  • Affects digestion
  • Signals reproductive maturation and behavior

26
Fish are conformers (well, sort of...)
  • Body temperature is that of the environment
  • Each species has particular range of temperatures
    that they can tolerate and that are optimal
  • Big difference between what you can tolerate and
    what you thrive in...

27
Behavioral Thermoregulation in Fishes
  • Although fish are ectotherms, they can alter
    their body temperature by moving to habitats with
    optimal temperature

28
Hot Fishes
  • Some fish can maintain body temperature greater
    than ambient - tunas, billfishes, relatives
    (nearly endothermic)
  • Use retia (similar to rete mirable) in swimming
    muscles to conserve heat, exchange O2, etc.
  • Red muscle is medial rather than distal
  • Billfishes have warm brains - heat organ from
    muscles around eye

29
Practical application
  • Youre management decisions and actions must
    account for fish responses to temperature
    gradients and limitations

30
Endocrine Systems of Fishes
31
Pituitary Gland - Master Gland
  • Linked with hypothalamus of brain
  • Produces hormones that affect other endocrine
    tissues - indirect influence
  • Produces hormones that affect non-endocrine
    tissues directly

32
Pituitary Gland
  • Indirect influence
  • ACTH - adrenocorticotrophic hormone
  • stimulates interrenal tissue production of
    cortisol
  • TH - thyrotrophic hormone
  • stimulate thyroid production of thyroxin (growth,
    metamorphosis-i.e. flounder)
  • GTH- gonadotrophic hormone
  • stimulates gonads to produce androgens/estrogens

33
Pituitary Gland
  • Effects non-endocrine tissues directly
  • pigmentation - melanophore stimulating hormone
    (MSH)
  • affects long-term control of color
  • osmoregulation - prolactin, vasotocin
  • controls fresh/saltwater systems
  • growth somatotrophic hormone
  • stimulates gt length, cell multiplication

34
Thyroid Gland
  • isolated follicles distributed in connective
    tissue along ventral aorta
  • controls metabolic rate
  • affects metamorphosis, maturation
  • facilitates switch between fresh salt water

35
Gonads
  • gamete and sex hormone production
  • controls gametes maturation
  • cause formation of secondary sex characteristics
    color, shape, behavior
  • in fish, several sex hormones also serve as
    pheromones - e.g. goldfish males respond to
    hormones released with ovulation

36
Other endocrine tissues in fishes
  • chromaffin tissues-located near kidneys heart
  • produce adrenaline/noradrenaline fight or
    flight
  • increases blood flow through gills, ventilation
    rate
  • interrenal (inside kidney) tissues
  • produce cortisol, cortisone - stress response
    hormones (reduce inflamation)

37
Other endocrine tissues in fishes
  • pancreatic islets
  • produce insulin - controls glucose, glycogen
    metabolism (glucagon production)
  • corpuscles of Stannius
  • produce stanniocalcin - controls Ca2 inflow at
    gills

38
Immune System
39
Introduction
  • Obviously, the immune system is important in
    homeostatic processes.
  • Immune systems of fish have two components
    non-specific and specific.
  • As we will see, both are involved in protecting
    fish from visible as well as invisible disease
    causing agents.

40
Non-specific immunity
  • Skin Scalesspecific solid layers of protection
    from pathological and chemical stressors.
  • Mucus secretiontraps microorganisms preventing
    entry into body cavity or circulation
  • Macrophages (phagcytes) and cytotoxic cellspart
    of the inflamatory response which destroy
    pathogens within the body before they can do harm.

41
Specific Immune Response
  • More of an active response where an invader is
    detected and destroyed.
  • Primary organs kidney, thymus, spleen,
    intestine.
  • Antigensinvading compounds which provoke an
    immune response.

Source Cancer Research Institute (2002)
www.cancerresearch.org/immhow.html
42
Specific immune response What if something does
get in??
  • White blood cells called B lymphocyte cells (B
    cells) and T lymphocyte cells (T cells)bind to
    foreign cells and begin replication and
    attachement to (sort of markers for things to
    come...).
  • Occasionally, invader actually goes trough a
    macrophage first...then B cell responds
  • Once B cells replicate, antibodies are produced
    which bind specifically to pathogens and tag them
    for destruction (eating) by macrophages!

43
(No Transcript)
44
Looks like meats back on the menu boys!!!
45
Questions???
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